Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

Good article by Osman…

http://www.cricinfo.com/pakistan-v-australia-2010/content/current/story/468725.html

Hope floats after hoodoo ends
In losing every single Test for nearly 15 years to Australia a broader story was being written than just one country’s complete owning of the other. In that time Australia have built decisively and maintained ruthlessly a dominance of the game almost unequalled, which is only now beginning to rust. More and less in the same period - but more pointedly from 1999 onwards - Pakistan’s years have been dark ones, struggling to build anything they haven’t themselves taken down immediately. Australia have prospered; Pakistan have flourished, struggled, flourished, struggled and then struggled more.
In a way, the Headingley result actually says as much about Australia’s continuing descent than it does about Pakistan. Not only has Ricky Ponting now overseen two Ashes losses after all, he is also the first Australian captain to lose a Test to Pakistan since John Howard became PM. It can be argued that if anything is a true indicator of their decline, it is this; that **no side quite as ludicrously inexperienced as this one has beaten Australia for many years is merely the salt. **
No opponent has had as tight and brutal a grip over Pakistan in the modern age as Australia; no opponent has so exposed Pakistan’s vast spectrum of frailties physical and mental; no opponent has so taunted Pakistan with the dictum that talent alone is nothing; no opponent has stuffed down their throats as forcefully the truth of sport today, that triumph has a collective, not individual, imprint.
In its own quiet way, shed of the jingoism of Pakistan-India, of the age of the Ashes and of the ego clashes of Australia-India, Pakistan’s modern contests with Australia (to call it a rivalry is to denigrate the notions of equality inherent in that) have also been compelling, for what they have revealed about each country’s approach to sport.
Until the end of that 1995-96 series, there was a degree of equality about their jostling; Pakistan had won 11 to Australia’s 14 Tests. Since then they only ever came close to not being thrashed three times and each time they lost, in Hobart in 1999, in Colombo in 2002 and in Sydney in 2009, it broke them that much more. By the time of Michael Hussey’s semi-final escape in May, they had long gone over the edge: a whole generation of cricketers had come and gone believing, behind the press conference platitudes and public statements, that Australia cannot be beaten. How crippled they are by Australia was evident in this chase. Forty to get with seven in hand, last night in Pakistan, was an equation fifty-fifty and that was an improvement from the opening day when they were 88 all out. The way they went about it this morning, possibly the players thought they had less chance. At one point, you would’ve put good money on John Howard’s longest hops winkling out the lower order.
But just to provide a blip in that equation is cause for some celebration - and there will be an outpouring in Pakistan. No matter that they collapsed at the finishing line only to stick one pinky over. In its own individual way, as the win that halted that run, it will be difficult to forget.
The optimist will draw greater significance, not least from this being a second win in 19 Tests against all sides. They chased a small total to win it, which is precisely what they haven’t done on three occasions in the last year alone. The nature of the chase suggested they’re far from getting it down pat and Pakistan have forever been poor chasers of small totals. To expect that to change overnight is to be a fool but finding a way to win, experiencing a big win, can do telling things to young players.
Elsewhere he will see the arrival of Azhar Ali and the immediate calm he brings to the top order and feel that here is something out of which a solid one-down can be moulded. He will look at an opening partnership that has provided three century and five half-century stands in 11 Tests, even as he scratches his chin to wonder how Imran Farhat has contributed to that; Friday was the Farhat of Lahore 2003-04, an opener of promise and patience, not the ICL-jigged chancer. He will note that not a single catch was dropped in the outfield over two Tests or by Kamran Akmal. The potential of the bowling attack, meanwhile, will compel even the pessimist to rejoice alongside him.
He’ll also say what a fine way to start a captaincy. Few would’ve imagined Salman Butt to be the man to break this hold but few second-guess Pakistan cricket correctly. Butt had his moments here, some nice hunches, some level-headedness but some scary, panicked moments too.
He should not, though, see the win as some triumph of youth over age and rule out a return of Mohammad Yousuf and Younis Khan. **The middle order has promise but nowhere through the two Tests has it been sturdy enough for Test cricket. **It needs the kind of mentoring Inzamam-ul-Haq’s presence in the middle provided earlier this decade to both Yousuf and Younis.
The pessimist will simply wait till the end of a still long summer.


Last point exactly what I have been saying in another thread

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

:alhamd: we finally did it :k: Congratulations to all the Muslims around the world (:D)

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

umm. Why would Muslims around the world be happy for Pakistan's win? We were not doing any jihad, nor were Aussies crusaders!
If we make it religious affair then I wonder what Kaneria is doing in the team. :)

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

somebody plz upload video for presentation ceremony

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

He wrote that in jest :)

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

He is just mimicking Shoaib malik...

This is Jinnah Supermarket in Islamabad


Hundreds of jubilant fans danced in the streets in major cities around the country, playing drums and handing sweets to celebrate as Umar Gul hit the winning runs.

Cricket fans took to the streets in Pakistan on Saturday to celebrate their side’s first Test victory over Australia in 15 years, after a tense fourth-day finish at Headingley.

Hundreds of jubilant fans danced in the streets in major cities around the country, playing drums and handing sweets to celebrate as Umar Gul hit the winning runs.

President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani congratulated the team on the historic win and said they hoped the side would continue to play with the same spirit.

Pakistan started the day on 140 for three, chasing a modest 180 to win, but lost four wickets for 40 runs to set up a nailbiting finish, eventually holding on to win by three wickets and level the two-Test series.

“We are really happy, the team has done a marvellous job,” Hammad Khan, a young fan told AFP in the northwest city of Peshawar.

In eastern city of Lahore, hundreds of young fans came out into the streets chanting: “Long live Pakistan”.

Private and state-run television stations broadcast the final overs live, and roads in cities around the country had a deserted look as people watched the climax of the game.

Muhammad Ijaz Butt, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board, announced a 500,000-rupee (6,000-dollar) win bonus for the players, state-run news agency APP reported.

The heads of all the major political parties and chief ministers of all four provinces also congratulated the team.

“It was an exciting win. Pakistan cricket team is one of the best in the world if they put their mind to it,” Syed Qaim Ali Shah, the chief minister of the southern Sindh province said.

Left-arm quick Mohammad Aamer was five not out and Umar Gul, who hit the winning run off Mitchell Johnson, one not out as Pakistan ended a run of 13 straight Test defeats by Australia — a record for one country against another.

The two-Test series was played in England after international cricket in Pakistan was effectively suspended following an armed attack on Sri Lanka’s team bus in Lahore in March last year

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/cricket/08-dancing-in-the-street-as-pakistan-end-australia-losing+streak-ts-01

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

wow thats great so much celebration on just one test match …thats great to see :jhanda:

Oh. Shoaib Malik said something similar? I didn't know that. That's why I missed sarcasm.

here
cricket-online.tv - cricket online Resources and Information.

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

While its nice see people celebrating etc we shouldnt get to carried away. Fine its a historic win but its a win that was long overdue.

PCB just announced cash prizes again...PM and President sent congratulatory messages too! Why? Did we win the World Cup?!

This is why our players rest on their laurels...we pamper them too much!

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

^ I think this time around it is not inappropriate seeing that this particular test victory came after 15 years of pain and toil

If they started congratulating them after every away test win then they w'd surely be overdoing it

To his credit Zardari has been a bit more restrained in this regard than Musharraf who literally overdid it by telephoning Inzi and Afridi after every test win (or atleast it seemed that way)


Sometimes wins like this send team's morale very high while denting other team's morale badly. Pakistani team has suffered morale injury many a times against Aussies, hopefully this victory will bring a new beginning for our team.

LMAOOOO....

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

Australia should be thankful to Pakistani team that they didn’t finish them off yesterday, otherwise Aussies losing a test in 3 days would’ve been too much for Cricket Australia!

:smiley: I just had to repeat it, I want to enjoy it till it lasts :cb:

Farhat has extended his stint as an opener after this performance. Not sure how long we will have to suffer due to this. We are a very forgiving nation lol.
Couldn't thank him enough though for his 50

I'm not sure if introducing rookies in Tests is the best way to transition them in. Azhar Ali and Amin both look very cautious at the moment. We will get to see their real game against England. Looking forward to it.

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

Good job Pakistan. Well done Salman.

HERO IS AAMIR.

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

The Akmal brothers need someone to knock some sense into them for not chasing every ball outside off-stump…that has been their downfall for the most part…especially Kamran

Bowling Legacy lives on - Kamran Abbasi
http://blogs.cricinfo.com/pakspin/archives/2010/07/bowling_legacy_lives_on.php

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

Umar seriously needs some tips for his defense

Re: Historic Thread: 2nd Test @ Headingley, Pakistan STUFF Australia after 15 years

I think this series kind of exposed Akmal Brother's batting. They need some help in the middle order to perform well with bat. If we look back it was when Yousuf or Younis were on the crease when both Umer and Kamran performed. It seems that they are not ready to take the entire burden of the middle order on their shoulders. Just not ready yet, especially Umer.